March 26 (Reuters) - Bank of England policymaker Alan Taylor said on Thursday that he saw a high bar to hiking interest rates and it was preferable to hold borrowing costs until there was greater
BoE's Taylor Advocates Holding Interest Rates Amid Iran War Uncertainty
Bank of England's Interest Rate Strategy in Response to Iran Conflict
Policymaker Alan Taylor's Position on Interest Rates
March 26 (Reuters) - Bank of England policymaker Alan Taylor said on Thursday that he saw a high bar to hiking interest rates and it was preferable to hold borrowing costs until there was greater clarity on the impact of the war in Iran on the economy.
Taylor, who until the start of the conflict was a long-time advocate for lower interest rates, voted this month to leave them on hold, as did all the other eight members of the Monetary Policy Committee, some of whom warned rate hikes could happen.
Speech Highlights from New York Conference
"Given massive uncertainty around future energy prices, and our starting point, I currently see a high bar to hiking," Taylor said in the text of a speech due to be delivered at a conference in New York hosted by Exante Data.
"Holding policy steady is preferable until the impact becomes clearer."
Inflation Risks and Economic Outlook
Despite a recent surge in inflation expectations among consumers and a jump in manufacturers' input costs, Taylor said there was a "low risk" of inflation in Britain becoming unanchored due to the weakening labour market and the smaller scale of the energy shock so far than in 2022.
Comparison with Previous Economic Shocks
Earlier on Thursday, BoE Deputy Governor Sarah Breeden said she saw less risk of second-round inflation effects now than from Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, due to greater labour market weakness.
Taylor said the current shock was more akin to 2011, when the BoE was able to "look through" a shock to energy prices without raising interest rates and damaging the economy.
Potential for Future Rate Cuts
If a similar scenario played out now, that might allow for interest rate cuts if risks diminish, Taylor said.
Risks of Prolonged Disruption
But he warned less favourable outcomes were possible.
"If disruptions persist and the shock grows, the MPC will face a tougher choice between high inflation and weaker growth," Taylor said. "The rate path will depend on the trade-off, and on whether risks of de-anchoring come into play."
Reporting Credits
(Reporting by Andy Bruce and William Schomberg; editing by Catarina Demony)


